{"title":"Pierre Bourdieu","authors":"Anne-Laure Anizan","doi":"10.1093/obo/9780199791231-0241","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Pierre Bourdieu (b. 1930–d. 2002) is widely regarded as one of the most influential sociologists and social theorists of the 20th century. He was an exceptionally productive researcher with a broad range of interests and a prolific writer: during his lifetime he published more than forty books and five hundred articles, essays, lectures, reviews, interviews, commentaries, films, and photography. His influence extends beyond sociology to philosophy, anthropology, education, geography, history, cultural studies, economics, political studies, feminist studies, science studies, and postcolonial studies. Bourdieu was born in a small village in the rural area of Béarn, in southwestern France, in a peasant sharecropper, later postman’s, family. He left his home region to pursue an academic education in Paris where he studied philosophy at the prestigious École normale supérieure (ENS). After graduation he was sent to Algeria to undertake his military service. Returning to France, he first had some teaching posts until he was nominated as director of studies at the (then) École pratique des haute études, in 1964; he also took over as director of the Centre de Sociologie Européenne. From this base, Bourdieu, with his collaborators, instigated a program of investigations into several aspects of cultural, social, and economic life, predominantly from the viewpoint of how they served in the reproduction of power and inequalities in French social life. Through his studies in the 1960s and 1970s, Bourdieu became first known as a sociologist of education. Childhood, as a topic or even an index word, hardly appears in Bourdieu’s published work. He did, however, register the phenomenon of childhood in some of his early, more methodological work when he referred to the (originally Durkheimian) notion of socialization, whereas “childhood” would have been for him “just a word,” similar to his response to the topic of “youth.” In his sociology of education, especially in his renown book Reproduction in Education, Society, and Culture (orig. 1970), written with his colleague Jean-Claude Passeron, children exist in the context of “pedagogic activity” within the family and the educational system. After Reproduction, Bourdieu’s focus widened to other fields of French social life. Unsurprisingly, the first uses of Bourdieu’s ideas in child(hood)-related studies were in the sociology of education, especially after the translation of Reproduction into English in 1977. Since the new field of childhood studies started to evolve in the mid-1980s, more Bourdieu-inspired studies have also emerged, with a broadening focus on children and childhood in social life.","PeriodicalId":42983,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Childhood Studies","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Childhood Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780199791231-0241","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
皮埃尔·布迪厄(生于1930-d)被广泛认为是20世纪最有影响力的社会学家和社会理论家之一。他是一位非常多产的研究人员,兴趣广泛,也是一位多产的作家:在他的一生中,他出版了四十多本书和五百多篇文章,散文,演讲,评论,采访,评论,电影和摄影。他的影响从社会学延伸到哲学、人类学、教育、地理、历史、文化研究、经济学、政治研究、女权主义研究、科学研究和后殖民研究。布迪厄出生在法国西南部bassaarn农村的一个小村庄里,出身于一个佃农家庭,后来成为了邮递员。他离开家乡前往巴黎接受学术教育,并在著名的École normale supsamrieure (ENS)学习哲学。毕业后,他被派往阿尔及利亚服兵役。回到法国后,他先是担任了一些教学职位,直到1964年被(当时的)École高级文控学院(pratique des haute)提名为研究主任;他还担任了欧洲社会研究中心主任。在此基础上,布迪厄和他的合作者发起了一项对文化、社会和经济生活的几个方面的调查计划,主要是从他们如何在法国社会生活中为权力再生产和不平等服务的观点出发。通过20世纪60年代和70年代的研究,布迪厄首先以教育社会学家的身份为人所知。童年,作为一个主题,甚至一个索引词,很少出现在布迪厄的出版作品中。然而,当他提到社会化(最初是涂尔干式的)概念时,他确实在他早期的一些更方法论的工作中记录了童年现象,而“童年”对他来说“只是一个词”,类似于他对“青年”主题的回应。在他的教育社会学中,特别是在他著名的《教育、社会和文化中的再生产》一书中。1970年),他与同事Jean-Claude Passeron共同撰写,儿童存在于家庭和教育系统中的“教育活动”背景中。在《再生产》之后,布迪厄的关注点扩展到了法国社会生活的其他领域。不出所料,布迪厄的思想在儿童(童年)相关研究中的首次应用是在教育社会学中,尤其是在1977年将《再生产》翻译成英语之后。自20世纪80年代中期儿童研究的新领域开始发展以来,更多受布迪厄启发的研究也出现了,对儿童和儿童在社会生活中的关注范围越来越广。
Pierre Bourdieu (b. 1930–d. 2002) is widely regarded as one of the most influential sociologists and social theorists of the 20th century. He was an exceptionally productive researcher with a broad range of interests and a prolific writer: during his lifetime he published more than forty books and five hundred articles, essays, lectures, reviews, interviews, commentaries, films, and photography. His influence extends beyond sociology to philosophy, anthropology, education, geography, history, cultural studies, economics, political studies, feminist studies, science studies, and postcolonial studies. Bourdieu was born in a small village in the rural area of Béarn, in southwestern France, in a peasant sharecropper, later postman’s, family. He left his home region to pursue an academic education in Paris where he studied philosophy at the prestigious École normale supérieure (ENS). After graduation he was sent to Algeria to undertake his military service. Returning to France, he first had some teaching posts until he was nominated as director of studies at the (then) École pratique des haute études, in 1964; he also took over as director of the Centre de Sociologie Européenne. From this base, Bourdieu, with his collaborators, instigated a program of investigations into several aspects of cultural, social, and economic life, predominantly from the viewpoint of how they served in the reproduction of power and inequalities in French social life. Through his studies in the 1960s and 1970s, Bourdieu became first known as a sociologist of education. Childhood, as a topic or even an index word, hardly appears in Bourdieu’s published work. He did, however, register the phenomenon of childhood in some of his early, more methodological work when he referred to the (originally Durkheimian) notion of socialization, whereas “childhood” would have been for him “just a word,” similar to his response to the topic of “youth.” In his sociology of education, especially in his renown book Reproduction in Education, Society, and Culture (orig. 1970), written with his colleague Jean-Claude Passeron, children exist in the context of “pedagogic activity” within the family and the educational system. After Reproduction, Bourdieu’s focus widened to other fields of French social life. Unsurprisingly, the first uses of Bourdieu’s ideas in child(hood)-related studies were in the sociology of education, especially after the translation of Reproduction into English in 1977. Since the new field of childhood studies started to evolve in the mid-1980s, more Bourdieu-inspired studies have also emerged, with a broadening focus on children and childhood in social life.